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Just read this on CNN. An American Airlines domestic flight was diverted earlier today after the pilot died. What a horrible situation for the co-pilot to deal with.
if the co-pilot was unable to land it, which it seems he was, it can be done on autopilot and diverted
to the nearest airport
Whilst he was co-pilot on this flight, on other flights he'll be the senior pilot.
And to think that the Ryanair boss, Michael O'Leary, suggested a few years back that short-haul flights should be allowed to fly with only one pilot. His reasoning being that in the last ten years only one pilot had suffered a heart attack mid-air and he was able to land his plane!
I'm all for cost saving but when the cost saving is putting people in danger then it's gone too far.
http://www.theguardian.com/money/2010/sep/08/ryanair-axe-unnecessary-co-pilots
I have no idea why the F/O wouldn't be able to land it, but it's not quite as simple as 'autopilot doing it'. It's true, once in the air a plane can fly and land itself on autopilot but you need a Cat3 ILS-equipped airport/runway (which not all are) and it needs to be programmed into the computer beforehand. If it isn't programmed in there and both captain and first officer are somehow incapacitated then they're pretty screwed unless someone else on board has a knowledge of such things..
If it isn't programmed in there and both captain and first officer are somehow incapacitated then they're pretty screwed unless someone else on board has a knowledge of such things.
In one of the many mimeographed joke sheets that used to circulate before e-mails and facebook existed was a list of pilot complaints/fault reports and engineer replies, including "AutoLand not working." with the reply "Auto Land never fitted to this type."
If I was in such situation, when air hostess asks "Is there anyone who know how to fly a plane." I'd say yes. After all, I've got a few hours on MS Flight Simulator.
Let's face it, if you are in such situation and there's no one who actually has the training to take the controls, you might as well give it a go yourself. Most of us know the fundamentals. There's no point strapped to your seat and wish for the best.
shame it's not fact
http://www.snopes.com/military/lighthouse.asp

Not true. First officer and captain are distinctly different positions.
Yes I know, but I've known plenty of captains serve as co-pilots to other captains on commercial flights.
Of course but that isn't how it is for most commercial flights. The way you worded it implied it was.